I think I figured that out a long time ago. I think a lot. Especially when there is nothing going on.

Sometimes, when I look at my Japanese dictionary, I compare kanji with prefixes and suffixes, like the suffix in the word psychology. I dunno. I can't verbally explain this.

I wonder how on bloody earth people communicate and fully understand stuff when they type in chopped up, grammar-less English. It'd be nice if people would actually put grammar into their messages! They know it well, so it isn't complicated! *holds up a torch*

You have the right to remain an idiot. Anything you say can and will be IGNORED!

Daisuke wrote:(And when i read "after I finished my danish, of course" i became a little confused, but thats the name of something you eat for breakfast right..?)

I know it's off-topic, but I couldn't help it Yes, danish can be something you eat.... but it is also a language, so the first time I read it, I thought for a minute that you were studying danish as well xD lol

Back on topic... ; learning over a 1.000 kanji does seem very hard. I guess I'll try to use some of your advice on learning/guessing some of the kanji's meaning from context, after knowing some more of them.

Hi. So far I've learned about 94 kanji, although some of them I don't fully know, especially all of the readings. I see this thread is kinda old but though I would ask anyway. I've been focusing on stroke order, meanings and combinations while only glancing at the readings for pronunciation of the words. Right now, I can't understand how I would learn the many different readings of each kanji by just memorizing all the on and kun. While almost at 100 kanji, I'm becoming unsure how I would retain what little I've learned. Any advice?

Only learn readings for Kanji which you actually come across. That will give you less things to memorize. The key to retaining Kanji is reviewing them often, making sure you still remember how to recognize and write them.

The output is blindingly fast, and you can navigate through websites too. I use it all the time, and find it very accurate, and the interface is much more elegant than other similar sites that I have seen. The demo translation is good for a laugh too. Perhaps the owner doesn't like cats!

Last edited by macgruder on Tue 05.02.2006 12:17 am, edited 1 time in total.

I am studying kanji right now to get the meanings, not the pronunciations. I study them by writing over and over and over while saying what it means, then asking myself a word in English (from a flashcard) and seeing if I can write it. I use writing because, while I may only need to recognize them, I find that I know it much better and can recognize much faster without worrying about mixing any kanji up if I learn to write them rather than to just read them. Every day I add 5-10 new kanji and go over the old ones. A lot of them, I know how to pronounce, I just never connected the kanji to it because I only ever used the hiragana. In those cases, I say the Japanese meaning/word/pronunciation instead of English. I also find it more useful to know the pronunciations in context than individual. I'd rather not memorize a list of 10 pronunciations. Instead, I know that chichi can also be pronounced fu because I know how fubo is prounounced. I know it from the compound, rather than just knowing that that's some other way to prounounce it.